Ovulation predictor

Ovulation Predictor

Ovulation prediction kits are now widely available and reasonably inexpensive, so they have become popular with many women planning for conception and pregnancy.

There are three main types of ovulation predictor.

The primary tests are two which are used at home. The most common and easiest to use is a urine test called an ovulation prediction kit (OPK), while the second type, a saliva ovulation test, uses a special microscope to detect a hormonal change in saliva.

The third type of ovulation predictor is a series of blood tests, which you may decide to arrange through your doctor if you are having trouble identifying your fertile period.

What does an ovulation predictor measure?

Just before ovulation occurs, there is a significant rise in the level of certain hormones, including oestrogen and luteinising hormone (LH).

The advantage that an ovulation predictor test has over some of the other methods of measuring ovulation, is that it can detect the rise in hormones that occurs in the lead up to ovulation.

Using the rise in your basal body temperature that occurs after ovulation, as a measure of ovulation, will only give you information after you have ovulated.

Little of your body’s fertile time remains after ovulation. So the ovulation temperature technique is only useful if you are trying to chart a pattern of ovulation over a number of months.

However, an ovulation predictor will often give a result between one and two days before ovulation, and so – theoretically – you are able to ensure that intercourse occurs at your most fertile time.

How accurate is an ovulation predictor?

There is very solid research behind everyday ovulation prediction kits, and advances in medical technology have made these kits easier and cheaper to manufacture, and therefore widely available.

However, one of the drawbacks of an ovulation predictor is that the rise in hormone levels may occur several times before the egg is released.

It is reasonably common for an ovulation predictor to give a “false positive” result. The result, while accurately reflecting the presence of a high level of hormones, does not necessarily mean that ovulation has occurred.

Urine tests – Ovulation predictor kits (OPKs)

An ovulation predictor kit (OPK) operates in a very similar way to a home pregnancy test.

These kits test for the presence of luteinising hormone (LH) in the urine, which occurs between 24 and 48 hours before the release of the egg.

While each kit may have a slightly different methodology, the kits usually require you to use them daily (generally first thing in the morning is best) for around a week at the time that you estimate will be your most fertile time.

Ironically, women who have irregular cycles – and therefore are most likely to need to use an OPK to assist them to predict the time of ovulation – usually find the kit is less accurate to use because of the variability in their fertile period.

One solution offered by OPK manufacturers for those with irregular cycles, is to use the kit more frequently throughout the cycle. However, this is a more costly option.

Most kits supply between five and 12 individual tests, however it is possible to buy the tests in bulk in some places.

Saliva Ovulation test

Another hormone which increases just before ovulation is oestrogen; and the presence of oestrogen causes a slight change in the structure of saliva, involving an increase in its salt content.

This increase in salt in saliva as a result of higher levels of oestrogen can be detected quite easily under a microscope because the salt-laden saliva crystallises into a fern-like pattern when it dries, unlike the usual shapeless, dotted pattern that saliva usually dries into.

Saliva ferning can be identified from around four days before ovulation, and is also present for about two days after ovulation. For this reason, it is important to test daily during the first part of the woman’s cycle.

Although most optical microscopes, at the correct setting, could theoretically detect this pattern, unless you have expertise with the use of microscopes, it is probably worth investing in a specialist mini-microscope designed to detect saliva patterns.

The saliva ovulation predictor test requires the user to develop a certain level of familiarity with patterns of saliva and can be a little fiddly.

However, although there is an initial investment in the purchase of the device, there are no ongoing costs, so this can be quite an economical way of identifying your fertile period.

Blood Tests

Regular blood tests taken every few days during your cycle can give more accurate measures of the quantity of hormones present at different stages of your cycle.

These tests are usually organised through your general practitioner or a fertility specialist.

Because they are more invasive than testing urine or saliva, blood tests would not normally be done unless other methods of identifying ovulation had been attempted first.

There are a number of conditions, some easily treated, which can interfere with fertility because your body is not producing the appropriate amounts of hormones at certain stages of your cycle.

Issues such as thyroid or endocrine problems (such as polycystic ovary syndrome, which affects between five and twelve percent of women and is one of the leading known causes of infertility) can be treated using drugs to stimulate ovulation.

Obviously, it’s really important to get tests to confirm an accurate diagnosis of any condition before undergoing treatment.

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